"Oh, there's nothing halfway about the Iowa way to treat you,
When we treat you which we may not do at all. 
There's an Iowa kind of special chip-on-the-shoulder attitude. 
We've never been without. That we recall.
We can be cold As our falling thermometers in December 
If you ask about our weather in July.
And we're so by God stubborn We could stand touchin' noses
For a week at a time And never see eye-to-eye."
- "Iowa Stubborn" From "The Music Man"
The  overall importance of the  Iowa Caucus is rightly a matter of  some debate.  After all,  fewer  people  voted  in Iowa in total  than  live  in  city of  San Francisco.  Iowa in general could hardly  be  considered  a demographic  representation of ,  well   anything  besides  mainly  white anglo-saxons.  The media  frenzy  that decends on  the Hawkeye state  every four years not withstanding,  the overall importance of  who won or who  lost in Iowa is largely  symbolic.    
Having  grown up on the other side of the  Mississippi River  in  Wisconsin,  I have heard  all manner of  Iowa jokes and puns.   Yet  once  every  four years  Iowa  in all its  Hawkeye  wierdness   takes  center stage in  our nation's poltical drama.     My Grandmother on my mother's side  was a native Iowan, her  youngest brother my Great Uncle,  still is.  Iowans  tend to be   a slightly cantankerous bunch. If I was  running for President,  my Uncle Dale, a retired  hog farmer  from Waterloo, Iowa   would frankly be the last voter I would want have to  try to win over.
I recall once  visiting his farm  when I was a young boy.  We were going to ride  one of his horses.  His daughter  was having little luck getting the horse to raise his head up out of the grass  so  the bit and bridle could be put on.  Dale, walking by saw this,  promptly walked over to the horse and kicked it sqaure in the jaw. the horse  jerked its head up and became very cooperative after that.   Dale's only  explanation  was  "You hafta  get their attention first."
By  giving  the first  primary vote victory of the 2008 election to  Barak Obama and second place  to John Edwards,  Iowa  collectively kicked  two  American politicians  square in jaw. With the clear purpose of getting their  attention.  
The first  was  George W. Bush.  The lopsided  turn out  of  Democrats versus  Republicans, including  the number of  Republicans  who  changed  ranks and  caucused  for a Democrat  is  something that, were I  a GOP strategist,   would have  me awake nights with worry.  Mike Huckabee can say he "won" Iowa  all he wants. But the fact is  he  simply was the Republican  who lost the least.  Iowa clearly  told  the GOP,  the  next  President  of the United States will not  be from your party, you  folks are done for a while. 
The second person to get  an Iowa footprint  to the  jaw was  Hillary  Clinton, and  by proxy  her husband, former  President Bill Clinton.  To a certain extent Iowa sent  a kick  through  the national  leadership of the Democratic  Party.  The word  "change" is in many ways  almost  a cliche' in poltics.   But with one swift kick,  Iowa  let it  be known that  just becuase  the next  President isn't going be a Republican,  it doesn't mean it's going be  just any Democrat.
Iowa clearly articulated what  is exptected of the  next President;   Ending the war, sooner  rather than later, the beginings of  universal heath coverage next year, rather than 4 years from now.  Addressing the global climate change crisis now  not  ten years from now.   The  recognition that  there IS a difference between  Free Trade and Fair Trade.  
I have  come away  this week  with  a new found  respect for those  cantankerous  Iowa voters.   The American political horse needed  a good swift kick to let it know that  2008 will be a year of change.  For the Democrats, you can't run for President, because you think it's your turn.   For the Republicans, you can't  expect not to be held accountable  for  mess your party  has made  over the last  8 years.  
But most of all, for both parties  you will not  be able to ignore  the  will of the American People, because  Iowa  has clearly shown the rest of the nation, a great way to  get your attention.
 
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